You mean the real one that you've made up in your head? I forgot, people like you always need something to be angry about so you can't have a utopia. I mean, who wouldn't want to live in a world with peace and equality and where you can just live a happy life.

Brownlow Medallist

You mean the real one that you've made up in your head? I forgot, people like you always need something to be angry about so you can't have a utopia. I mean, who wouldn't want to live in a world with peace and equality and where you can just live a happy life.

Yep, it's always the latest Australians' fault. It's the Muslims (but before that, the Asians, and before that, the Italians, and before that, the English). Shall we take bets on whose fault it will be next?

Mr. Mojo Risin'

Yep, it's always the latest Australians' fault. It's the Muslims (but before that, the Asians, and before that, the Italians, and before that, the English). Shall we take bets on whose fault it will be next?

My money is on the Montenegrin's. Those aggressive Adriatic bastards will no doubt stop at nothing to subversively start world war III or at the very least tear apart the last remaining fabric of Australia society.

110% sass!

Funny, talking to a senior copper who was matter of fact about it. Basically said you can't do most of the stuff they used to do. Everyone's got a phone and the system is there to scrutinise everything they do.

They get away with stuff but its nowhere near as easy as it used to be.

Mr. Mojo Risin'

It depicts the 1969 mission to land men on the moon and return them safely. But the film does not show Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin unfurling and planting an American flag on the lunar surface. And its creators, including Gosling, say they view the moment as a human achievement more than an American one, and have suggested Armstrong did not believe he was an "American hero."

"From my interviews with his family and people that knew him, it was quite the opposite," Gosling said, according to Britain's Telegraph newspaper. "And we wanted the film to reflect Neil."

It was also about human achievement. Technically the USSR won the space race originally... so this really doesn't matter. No one cares which country it was anymore that sent people into space, it's just an achievement of humanity. Grow up Ron, not everything is black and white, well for you just white.